Board Names?

That's really awesome - a few more months you'll be the next Slydog! I really liked the speed readout on the vid and the invisible selfie stick. I'm assuming you were using a gimbal/steady-cam setup, very slick stable video. You really need to stick with it, shooting engaging vids is hard to get right, and you seem to have a real eye for photography & camera work.

Awesome vid! Great sound track, great use of effects . . . and love the helmet - it's just too easy to bump the thinker, and you'll want that in good shape for many many more years - your people need people like you.

By the way, totally give you a pass on the haircut - fly your colors proud brutha.

What state are you in? You always look like you have perfect weather.

You may want to start scouting your area and planning a ride/video.

It starts with taking notes as you go (no camera necessary), thinking about what is meaningful to you, what you think others may like to see, choreograph your camera angles & speed to capture the mood of the beauty you see that you want to share with others, map your weather windows to get the lighting you want, plan and use your effects only as an accent (less is more) - journal it all, sketch it in frames like a comic book if you can draw.

It's called story-boarding in film school . . . putting the pieces together in print and drawings to tell a story with your OneWheel (Dolly Camera).

It happens for every film, whether indie or a major motion picture. You have to know what you want to say and how you want to say it, before you lay it down on film.

Slydog does it in Chicago, and I'm not sure he's even aware of it - he's not showing how rad his skills are (though that may be part of his intention), he's telling you a story of a moment in time in his city, and the sights in his city tell their own story of their past at the same time.

There're plenty of guys that have his skill, but he's (accidentally?) pulling it together with his gifts to touch others of all ages on many levels.

That's art.

You have that eye to tell a story. Find that story in your life, where you live, right now, it's there - and with your eye, you can bring it to life and share it with the world.

@Kielanders Thank you so much for the feedback and pointers!!!! I actually live in Newark Delaware....
The weather usually looks nice on film but it is super humid Here....you seem to have great knowledge for filmmaking... are you a teacher?